This page depicts the 100 block of Fayetteville Street in Greensboro (later Asheboro Street, and still later Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive). W.L. McNair's business was first located at 106 Fayetteville Street.

This scrapbook documents the activities of the Home & Foreign Missions committee of West Market Street Church, and includes all types of materials, especially photographs, clippings, pamphlets, and programs.

This folder contains an essay written by Mary Mendenhall Hobbs titled "The Young Friends' Branch," dated 1-10-1910. The undated lecture notes found in this folder are on the topic of "present-day opportunities for Young Friends."

This "8th Anniversary Conference of the Young People's Missionary Movement " scrapbook is a record of the missionary education activities in which Mrs. G. W. Whitsett participated during the summer of 1910. She saved photographs, notes and programs from the conference in Asheville, NC. Also included are images of teachers, students and rare book covers from the missions program of the West Market Street Methodist Church of Greensboro, NC; the Epworth League, and the Missions Study Class.

A collection of letters related to requests for information for “The History, Development, and Influence of Cotton Mills in North Carolina”. The inquiries were made by State Normal and Industrial College librarian Annie F. Petty and future alumnus Clara Booth Byrd. Assisting in the research were Bernard Cone, D. A. Tompkins, and representatives of many cotton mills and banks.

Exterior view of the Carnegie Library, located at Library Place (now Commerce Place) in Greensboro. Two Carnegie libraries opened as part of the segregated Greensboro Public Library in 1902, this one and the Carnegie Negro Library near Bennett College. The latter is till standing, though it is no longer used as a library. Additional Carnegie facilities were located at the State Normal and Industrial College (now The University of North Carolina at Greensboro) and at Guilford College.; Businesses;Context